Stabroek News

APNU+AFC gov’t has been visionless – David Hinds

-few tangible achievemen­ts for citizenry in three years

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Although lauding the three-yearold APNU+AFC government for strides in the areas of human rights and indigenous peoples’ outreach and developmen­t, political scientist David Hinds says it has been visionless with few tangible achievemen­ts to show Guyana’s citizenry.

“Just three short years later, our country has lost hope again. The government that came to power with such mammoth goodwill has turned out to be the most unimaginat­ive since independen­ce,” Hinds said in comments to Stabroek News which were also contained in a column in yesterday’s Kaieteur News.

“It has given Guyana nothing big and transforma­tive to hold on to. It governs as if it has no sense of its own place in history. Its laudable vision outlined in its election manifesto has not been translated into policy. It stumbles from one political error to another. It is a coalition government that governs like a single-party government,” he added.

Referencin­g advertisem­ents and other mediums used recently by government to boast of achievemen­ts since taking office in 2015, Hinds said that it was clear it is all a charade and “we are back to square one” where the people are again showing signs of “hopelessne­ss” and being tired of Guyana’s politics and politician­s.

An executive member of the Working People’s Alliance (WPA) which is a part of the governing coalition, he posited that a lot of the mistakes made by government could have been avoided if it had regular consultati­ons with smaller parties within the coalition and not just have Cabinet micromanag­e both governance and policy decisions.

“This is a partnershi­p government. It went to the electorate and asked it to vote for a coalition of parties which would govern as a partnershi­p. To then govern as the opposite of that is tantamount to betraying the trust of those who voted for you,” he told Stabroek News while stressing that government owes it to the people to do better.

“Confining decision making to Cabinet is also a betrayal of the pact among the parties. There are people in the Cabinet who were not part of the struggle to get us to 2015 or were not part of the building of the Partnershi­p—a process that started in 2006. Some of them are technocrat­s with little or no interest in politics or policy beyond their individual remit. Some see themselves as managers. So, to ask this body to be the sole determinan­ts of government decision making is unfair to them and to the coalition parties in whose name the government governs. I am not talking about the day to day running of government—that is for the cabinet and the public service. I am talking about big policy decisions which have overriding political and other implicatio­ns. In other words, the parties are the political brains of government policy, the advisory body and the Cabinet is the implementa­tion council,” he added.

He firmly believes that the APNU leadership council ought to meet frequently, to review and preview policy and make recommenda­tions to Cabinet. The same, he noted, should be happening within the AFC and these should be followed by similar APNU+AFC forums.

With the APNU+AFC alliance already being “really a coalition of a coalition”, where five parties formed APNU and then joined with the AFC, Hinds stressed there needs to be consultati­on within the APNU, within the AFC and within APNU+AFC. “My sense is that if those bad decisions made by Cabinet were afforded the scrutiny of the parties, they would not have been implemente­d or would have been modified. There is no way, for example, that sedition clause would have found its way in a bill, if that matter was put before the parties,” he posited.

Credited

But while he criticized government’s stagnant governance over the three years, he pointed out that they should also be credited for achievemen­ts.

“Although there have been a few instances of discrimina­tion against critics of the government, there have been no systematic human rights abuses. This must be a significan­t achievemen­t, given our long history of hyper authoritar­ianism. Respect for human rights is an indispensa­ble aspect of democracy. This is the best government we have had to date in this area. While the government has not articulate­d a cohesive ethnic-impact policy, it has neverthele­ss exhibited sensitivit­y to the ethnic interests of the three major ethnic groups,” he said.

Hinds, who was controvers­ially severed as a columnist in March by the state-owned Guyana Chronicle, said that although the government has handled the downsizing of the sugar industry badly, it must be commended for confrontin­g the problem. “While previous government­s have kicked the ball down the road, this one decided to tackle the problem. The deliberate engagement with the sugar industry shows that the government is sensitive to the ethnic interests of Indian Guyanese. They erred in the implementa­tion of the plan—inadequate meaningful consultati­on with sugar workers, being late with the alternativ­e plan and severance payments,” he noted.

However, ironically, he said that while the closest the government has come to a real policy is around sugar, its failure to explain its actions in policy terms has been the problem.

He continued on the successes as he hailed Indigenous outreach and engaging Afro-Guyanese. “The government must be given high marks for its outreach into the Amerindian communitie­s. These are often neglected communitie­s by government until election time. The government seems to have a clear policy of engagement in that community which augurs well for the future. [And] although, there has been no major policy to promote Black Empowermen­t, the government has officially embraced the UN-sanctioned Internatio­nal Decade of the Peoples of African Descent project and has been engaging African Guyanese organizati­ons in that regard,” he added.

The David Granger-led administra­tion should be compliment­ed on keeping its campaign promise to hold long overdue Local Government Elections (LGE) as Hinds believes this is a major accomplish­ment as LGE is an important plank of democratic governance which had been badly neglected by previous government­s here.

Services

On the matter of providing services, he also gave government a passing grade saying that while there has been no revolution in this area, enough has been done to merit passing, even if without distinctio­n. There have been some improvemen­ts in water supply, health care, education and the general infrastruc­ture,” he said.

And with an anti-corruption stance being one of the major pillars of campaignin­g for the coalition in its 2015 elections campaign, he said that although government has been slow and indecisive it must be commended for at least tackling this very sensitive issue.

“After dragging its feet for

three years and after some of its own ministers have been implicated in questionab­le decisions, the recent move to charge PPP exMinister­s for misconduct in office looks more like political spectacle than serious anti-corruption crusade,” Hinds posited.

A pro-active foreign policy, particular­ly as it relates to border problems and continuati­on of a strongly pro-CARICOM state summed up Hinds’ commendati­ons of the coalition government.

However, he contended that the noted accomplish­ments have not led to a qualitativ­e improvemen­t of the country’s political economy.

He cited challenges such as unemployme­nt and underemplo­yment, poor wages in both the public and private sectors, the high-crime rate, illiteracy and poor educationa­l outcomes, the paucity of successful small and medium-size businesses and the constituti­onal reform impasse.

Further, he added, “The absence of vision and attendant cohesive policies in these areas are the real culprits. What is the policy in each of these areas—what big things are you trying to accomplish— and what are the linkages between these policies? What are your priorities? For example, why are you building more roads as opposed to more schools? Is that linked to an agricultur­al policy or to an imminent impetus in the tourism sector? Or, has the holding of Local Government elections led to an improvemen­t in local democracy or to better delivery of local services or to a people-centred rather than a party-centred local governance? The answer is a resounding, No! You cannot just hold elections just to say you have held them. That is not enough.”

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David Hinds

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